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The Seven Purposes: An Experience in Psychic Phenomena

Chapter 42: FOOTNOTES
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About This Book

The author recounts personal experiments with a planchette that begin skeptically and lead to sustained communications purportedly from the dead, initially providing personal messages to bereaved acquaintances and later expanding into a set of twelve impersonal communications outlining spiritual Lessons. The narrative documents the gradual development of these revelations, the methods used, and further individual messages that elucidate themes of continuity of personality, a connecting force between planes, the struggle between construction and disintegration, and the moral call to brotherhood and purposeful living, aiming to comfort mourners and propose practical spiritual guidance.

FOOTNOTES

[1] These names occurred to me, because these three persons left us within a twelvemonth, about three years ago, and all were either friends or closely identified with friends of ours.

[2] I now believe that this was Annie Manning’s first interruption.

[3] I had asked whether she knew any of the three persons previously mentioned, and each time she had replied in the negative.

[4] Her husband, Mansfield Kendal.

[5] I have since learned that this was characteristic of him. His letters home frequently began: “Dear Family.”

[6] Several hours later I read Cass’s letter and telegram to his physician, who advised me to go at once to Atlantic City.

[7] Each of these words was written in larger script than the preceding one.

[8] Later developments make it seem probable that this was an attempt to write the familiar diminutive for which his father afterward asked, and that my “too rigid vigilance” shut out the suggestion.

[9] Short-circuited?

[10] In describing Frederick’s pyrotechnical “upside-down stunts” and the later “trimmings,” the great facility with which they were executed should have been more strongly emphasized. They were all written with extraordinary rapidity and firmness.